Introductory Remarks

It is an honor and a privilege to be a contributor to my new Blog
site. And, in the ensuing months, I plan to provide accurate, comprehensive,
truthful materials on the spiritual roots and successes of early Alcoholics
Anonymous.

Pioneer A.A. in Akron had a documented 75% to 93% success rate. Dr.
Bob and his Akron crew developed a very simple recovery program within their
Christian Fellowship. And those who gave it their best could and did claim that
they had been cured of alcoholism. Yes cured! Bill Wilson said so. Dr. Bob said
so. Bill Dotson (A.A. Number Three) said so (See Big Book, p. 191 for an
example). And so did the others for almost the first decade.

Then came revisions, universalization, secularization, and downward
percentage of successes. Decades of false security followed. Accompanied by
events that have seen A.A. stop growing, multitudes leave in favor of other
groups, and A.A. itself become host to no more than one to five percent
successes among those within the rooms. What a crusher for those of us who
received and hopefully gave so much within the rooms of Alcoholics Anonymous.

Nobody is going to change A.A. But AAs can certainly learn all
there is to know about their history, their original program, and the reliance
on the Creator that was the essence of its success. I want to be one of those
who tells the facts. For one thing, early AAs favored the Book of James, to the
point of wanting to call the society The James Club. And the first chapter of
James tells us why. It spoke of patience. It spoke of asking Godís wisdom
without doubting. It spoke of resisting temptation. It spoke of doing the Word
of God, not just hearing it. And it spoke of real help for others. It went on to
espouse the royal law of love thy neighbor as thyself and the practical
admonition that faith without works is barren and useless.Step 1Step 2 Step 3Step 4Step 5Step 6Step 7Step 8Step 9 Step 10Step 11
I never miss an opportunity to tell people today that they can be
believers within the ranks of 12 Step Fellowships. They donít need to run and
hide. They donít need to cower in a corner. They need to hear that God, the Good
Book, and the acceptance of Jesus Christ were part and parcel of the early
successes of the real spiritual program of recovery. They need to understand
that they have the choice today to look upward to God instead of outward on
misery. Their own early days back up the wisdom of choosing Yahweh our Creator
as the power that heals, loves, forgives, and delivers. All this while offering
today both participation and service in the great fellowship of Alcoholics
Anonymous.

If, as Bill Wilson wrote, love and tolerance are our code; and if,
as Dr. Bob so often said, the whole thing boils down to love and service, then
the message that God can do for us what we could not do for ourselves is as
viable today as it was when old-timers were willing to say and believe that very
thing.